It was night. All the little stars were looking down and
twinkling and twinkling. Mother Moon was doing her best to make
the Green Meadows as light as Mr. Sun did in the daytime. All the
little birds except Hooty the Owl and Boomer the Night Hawk, and
noisy Mr. Whip-poor-will were fast asleep in their little nests.
Old Mother West Wind's Merry Little Breezes had all gone to
sleep, too. It was oh so still! Indeed it was so very still that
Bobby Coon, coming down the Lone Little Path through the wood,
began to talk to himself.
"I don't see what people want to play all day and sleep all night
for," said Bobby Coon. "Night's the best time to be about. Now
Reddy Fox--"
"Be careful what you say about Reddy Fox," said a voice right
behind Bobby Coon.
Bobby Coon turned around very quickly indeed, for he had thought
he was all alone. There was Reddy Fox himself, trotting down the
Lone Little Path through the wood.
"I thought you were home and fast asleep, Reddy Fox," said Bobby
Coon.
"You were mistaken," said Reddy Fox. "For you see I'm out to take
a walk in the moonlight."
So Bobby Coon and Reddy Fox walked together down the Lone Little
Path through the wood to the Green Meadows. They met Jimmy Skunk,
who had dreamed that there were a lot of beetles up on the hill,
and was just going to climb the Crooked Little Path to see.
"Hello, Jimmy Skunk!" said Bobby Coon and Reddy Fox. "Come down
to the Green Meadows with us."
Jimmy Skunk said he would, so they all went down on the Green
Meadows together, Bobby Coon first, Reddy Fox next and Jimmy
Skunk last of all, for Jimmy Skunk never hurries. Pretty soon
they came to the house of Johnny Chuck.
"Listen," said Bobby Coon. "Johnny Chuck is fast asleep."
They all listened and they could hear Johnny Chuck snoring away
down in his snug little bed.
"Let's give Johnny Chuck a surprise," said Reddy Fox.
"What shall it be?" asked Bobby Coon.
"I know," said Reddy Fox. "Let's roll that big stone right over
Johnny Chuck's doorway; then he'll have to dig his way out in the
morning."
So Bobby Coon and Reddy Fox pulled and tugged and tugged and
pulled at the big stone till they had rolled it over Johnny
Chuck's doorway. Jimmy Skunk pretended not to see what they were
doing.
"Now let's go down to the Laughing Brook and wake up old
Grandfather Frog and hear him say 'Chug-a-rum,'" said Bobby Coon.
"Come on!" cried Reddy Fox, "I'll get there first!"
Away raced Reddy Fox down the Lone Little Path and after him ran
Bobby Coon, going to wake old Grandfather Frog from a nice
comfortable sleep on his green lily pad.
But Jimmy Skunk didn't go. He watched Reddy Fox and Bobby Coon
until they were nearly to the Laughing Brook. Then he began to
dig at one side of the big stone which filled the doorway of
Johnny Chuck's house. My, how he made the dirt fly! Pretty soon
he had made a hole big enough to call through to Johnny Chuck,
who was snoring away, fast asleep in his snug little bed below.
"Johnny Chuck, Chuck, Chuck! Johnny Woodchuck!" called Jimmy
Skunk.
But Johnny Chuck just snored.
"Johnny Chuck, Chuck, Chuck! Johnny Woodchuck!" called Jimmy
Skunk once more.
But Johnny Chuck just snored. Then Jimmy Skunk called again, this
time louder than before.
"Who is it?" asked a very sleepy voice.
"It's Jimmy Skunk. Put your coat on and come up here!" called
Jimmy Skunk.
"Go away, Jimmy Skunk. I want to sleep!" said Johnny Chuck.
"I've got a surprise for you, Johnny Chuck. You'd better come!"
called Jimmy Skunk through the little hole he had made. When
Johnny Chuck heard that Jimmy Skunk had a surprise for him he
wanted to know right away what it could be, so though he was
very, very sleepy, he put on his coat and started up for his door
to see what the surprise was that Jimmy Skunk had. And there he
found the big stone Reddy Fox and Bobby Coon had put there, and
of course he was very much surprised indeed. He thought Jimmy
Skunk had played him a mean trick and for a few minutes he was
very mad. But Jimmy Skunk soon told him who had filled up his
doorway with the big stone.
"Now you push from that side, Johnny Chuck, and I'll pull from
this side, and we'll soon have this big stone out of your
doorway," said Jimmy Skunk.
So Johnny Chuck pushed and Jimmy Skunk pulled, and sure enough
they soon had the big stone out of Johnny Chuck's doorway.
"Now," said Jimmy Skunk, "we'll roll this big stone down the Lone
Little Path to Reddy Fox's house and we'll give Reddy Fox a
surprise."
So Johnny Chuck and Jimmy Skunk tugged and pulled and rolled the
big stone down to the house of Reddy Fox, and sure enough, it
filled his doorway.
"Good night, Jimmy Skunk," said Johnny Chuck, and trotted down
the Lone Little Path toward home, chuckling to himself all the
way.
Jimmy Skunk walked slowly up the Lone Little Path to the wood,
for Jimmy Skunk never hurries. Pretty soon he came to the big
hollow tree where Bobby Coon lives, and there he met Hooty the
Owl.
"Hello, Jimmy Skunk, where have you been?" asked Hooty the Owl.
"Just for a walk," said Jimmy Skunk. "Who lives in this big
hollow tree?"
Now of course Jimmy Skunk knew all the time, but he pretended he
didn't.
"Oh, this is Bobby Coon's house," said Hooty the Owl.
"Let's give Bobby Coon a surprise," said Jimmy Skunk.
"How?" asked Hooty the Owl.
"We'll fill his house full of sticks and leaves," said Jimmy
Skunk.
Hooty the Owl thought that would be a good joke so while Jimmy
Skunk gathered all the old sticks and leaves he could find, Hooty
the Owl stuffed them into the old hollow tree which was Bobby
Coon's house, until he couldn't get in another one.
"Good night," said Jimmy Skunk as he began to climb the Crooked
Little Path up the hill to his own snug little home.
"Good night," said Hooty the Owl, as he flew like a big soft
shadow over to the Great Pine.
By and by when old Mother Moon was just going to bed and all the
little stars were too sleepy to twinkle any longer, Reddy Fox and
Bobby Coon, very tired and very wet from playing in the Laughing
Brook, came up the Lone Little Path, ready to tumble into their
snug little beds. They were chuckling over the trick they had
played on Johnny Chuck, and the way they had waked up old
Grandfather Frog, and all the other mischief they had done. What
do you suppose they said when they reached their homes and found
that someone else had been playing jokes, too?
I'm sure I don't know, but round, red Mr. Sun was laughing very
hard as he peeped over the hill at Reddy Fox and Bobby Coon, and
he won't tell why.